novice question on getting a stuck vehicle out
Guest
Posts: n/a
have lots of meat
(of course this can consist of chicken, beef, pork, or shrimp).
Who can resist this classic appetizer; or light lunch served with
a fresh salad? Versatility is probably this recipe?s greatest virtue,
as one can use the best part of a prime, rare, yearling, or the
morticians occasional horror: a small miracle stopped short by a
drunk driver, or the innocent victim of a drive-by shooting...
2 cups finely chopped very young human flesh
1 cup shredded cabbage
1 cup bean sprouts
5 sprigs green onion, finely chopped
5 cloves minced garlic
4-6 ounces bamboo shoots
Sherry
chicken broth
oil for deep frying (1 gallon)
Salt
pepper
soy & teriyaki
minced ginger, etc.
1 tablespoon cornstarch dissolved in a little cold water
1 egg beaten
Make the stuffing:
Marinate the flesh in a mixture of soy and teriyaki sauces
then stir fry in hot oil for till brown - about 1 minute, remove.
Stir-fry the vegetables.
Put the meat back into the wok and adjust the seasoning.
De-glaze with sherry, cooking off the alcohol.
Add broth (optional) cook a few more minutes.
Add the cornstarch, cook a few minutes till thick,
then place the stuffing into a colander and cool;
2 hours
Wrap the rolls:
Place 3 tablespoons of stuffing in the wrap, roll tightly -
corner nearest you first, fold 2 side corners in,
wrap
(of course this can consist of chicken, beef, pork, or shrimp).
Who can resist this classic appetizer; or light lunch served with
a fresh salad? Versatility is probably this recipe?s greatest virtue,
as one can use the best part of a prime, rare, yearling, or the
morticians occasional horror: a small miracle stopped short by a
drunk driver, or the innocent victim of a drive-by shooting...
2 cups finely chopped very young human flesh
1 cup shredded cabbage
1 cup bean sprouts
5 sprigs green onion, finely chopped
5 cloves minced garlic
4-6 ounces bamboo shoots
Sherry
chicken broth
oil for deep frying (1 gallon)
Salt
pepper
soy & teriyaki
minced ginger, etc.
1 tablespoon cornstarch dissolved in a little cold water
1 egg beaten
Make the stuffing:
Marinate the flesh in a mixture of soy and teriyaki sauces
then stir fry in hot oil for till brown - about 1 minute, remove.
Stir-fry the vegetables.
Put the meat back into the wok and adjust the seasoning.
De-glaze with sherry, cooking off the alcohol.
Add broth (optional) cook a few more minutes.
Add the cornstarch, cook a few minutes till thick,
then place the stuffing into a colander and cool;
2 hours
Wrap the rolls:
Place 3 tablespoons of stuffing in the wrap, roll tightly -
corner nearest you first, fold 2 side corners in,
wrap
Guest
Posts: n/a
>The trouble with using a Libby for recovery operations
>is that it is probably too light, and won't pull very well
>anyway. If it can accomplish the recovery operation at all,
>it can probably do it in HI. I am not meaning to go around
>dissing Libbys, it's just...
My experience with using a libby to unstick something:
http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/stucktj.jpg
By the way, Liberty's are rated to 5,000lbs towing. I have had that TJ
you see there on a lowboy trailor for a 100mi haul. The Liberty
handeled it wonderfuly. Over the years I have trailered many vehicles,
usually pulled by a full sized p.u. and the Libby is just as good as
anything for pulling something. They also work great for dragging the
occasional dead cow off down into the woods when the tractor is
konked-out.
>is that it is probably too light, and won't pull very well
>anyway. If it can accomplish the recovery operation at all,
>it can probably do it in HI. I am not meaning to go around
>dissing Libbys, it's just...
My experience with using a libby to unstick something:
http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/stucktj.jpg
By the way, Liberty's are rated to 5,000lbs towing. I have had that TJ
you see there on a lowboy trailor for a 100mi haul. The Liberty
handeled it wonderfuly. Over the years I have trailered many vehicles,
usually pulled by a full sized p.u. and the Libby is just as good as
anything for pulling something. They also work great for dragging the
occasional dead cow off down into the woods when the tractor is
konked-out.
Guest
Posts: n/a
>The trouble with using a Libby for recovery operations
>is that it is probably too light, and won't pull very well
>anyway. If it can accomplish the recovery operation at all,
>it can probably do it in HI. I am not meaning to go around
>dissing Libbys, it's just...
My experience with using a libby to unstick something:
http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/stucktj.jpg
By the way, Liberty's are rated to 5,000lbs towing. I have had that TJ
you see there on a lowboy trailor for a 100mi haul. The Liberty
handeled it wonderfuly. Over the years I have trailered many vehicles,
usually pulled by a full sized p.u. and the Libby is just as good as
anything for pulling something. They also work great for dragging the
occasional dead cow off down into the woods when the tractor is
konked-out.
>is that it is probably too light, and won't pull very well
>anyway. If it can accomplish the recovery operation at all,
>it can probably do it in HI. I am not meaning to go around
>dissing Libbys, it's just...
My experience with using a libby to unstick something:
http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/stucktj.jpg
By the way, Liberty's are rated to 5,000lbs towing. I have had that TJ
you see there on a lowboy trailor for a 100mi haul. The Liberty
handeled it wonderfuly. Over the years I have trailered many vehicles,
usually pulled by a full sized p.u. and the Libby is just as good as
anything for pulling something. They also work great for dragging the
occasional dead cow off down into the woods when the tractor is
konked-out.
Guest
Posts: n/a
>The trouble with using a Libby for recovery operations
>is that it is probably too light, and won't pull very well
>anyway. If it can accomplish the recovery operation at all,
>it can probably do it in HI. I am not meaning to go around
>dissing Libbys, it's just...
My experience with using a libby to unstick something:
http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/stucktj.jpg
By the way, Liberty's are rated to 5,000lbs towing. I have had that TJ
you see there on a lowboy trailor for a 100mi haul. The Liberty
handeled it wonderfuly. Over the years I have trailered many vehicles,
usually pulled by a full sized p.u. and the Libby is just as good as
anything for pulling something. They also work great for dragging the
occasional dead cow off down into the woods when the tractor is
konked-out.
>is that it is probably too light, and won't pull very well
>anyway. If it can accomplish the recovery operation at all,
>it can probably do it in HI. I am not meaning to go around
>dissing Libbys, it's just...
My experience with using a libby to unstick something:
http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/stucktj.jpg
By the way, Liberty's are rated to 5,000lbs towing. I have had that TJ
you see there on a lowboy trailor for a 100mi haul. The Liberty
handeled it wonderfuly. Over the years I have trailered many vehicles,
usually pulled by a full sized p.u. and the Libby is just as good as
anything for pulling something. They also work great for dragging the
occasional dead cow off down into the woods when the tractor is
konked-out.
Guest
Posts: n/a
Where was that photo taken?
Tom
<jcwelch@hal-pc.org> wrote in message
news:1104112477.592765.300880@f14g2000cwb.googlegr oups.com...
>>
> My experience with using a libby to unstick something:
> http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/stucktj.jpg
>
>
Tom
<jcwelch@hal-pc.org> wrote in message
news:1104112477.592765.300880@f14g2000cwb.googlegr oups.com...
>>
> My experience with using a libby to unstick something:
> http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/stucktj.jpg
>
>
Guest
Posts: n/a
Where was that photo taken?
Tom
<jcwelch@hal-pc.org> wrote in message
news:1104112477.592765.300880@f14g2000cwb.googlegr oups.com...
>>
> My experience with using a libby to unstick something:
> http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/stucktj.jpg
>
>
Tom
<jcwelch@hal-pc.org> wrote in message
news:1104112477.592765.300880@f14g2000cwb.googlegr oups.com...
>>
> My experience with using a libby to unstick something:
> http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/stucktj.jpg
>
>
Guest
Posts: n/a
Where was that photo taken?
Tom
<jcwelch@hal-pc.org> wrote in message
news:1104112477.592765.300880@f14g2000cwb.googlegr oups.com...
>>
> My experience with using a libby to unstick something:
> http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/stucktj.jpg
>
>
Tom
<jcwelch@hal-pc.org> wrote in message
news:1104112477.592765.300880@f14g2000cwb.googlegr oups.com...
>>
> My experience with using a libby to unstick something:
> http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/stucktj.jpg
>
>
Guest
Posts: n/a
mabar wrote:
> Where was that photo taken?
Out behind my Mom's house. See:
http://lnc.grwelch.com
There is a creek that cuts a 40 acre pasture into two parts. The last
time we had someone out there doing dozer work I had him cut a ford
from one side of the creek to the other so that we would not have to go
out to the road and drive around to the other side of pasture to check
on the cows. Of course the cows go back and forth and erosion set in
and now it is a nice Jeep trap.
The wrangler was doing something like this when I missed the line,
slipped a deep rut and planted the frame.
http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/MOV00010.MPG
If someone has 40 meg of spare web-space I can put up the rest of the
set of movies. One day we went back there with the Wrangler and the
Liberty and played 'follow the leader' while filming the whole thing.
My ISP only gives me 10 meg of webspace and I was only able to get one
of the files up.
> Where was that photo taken?
Out behind my Mom's house. See:
http://lnc.grwelch.com
There is a creek that cuts a 40 acre pasture into two parts. The last
time we had someone out there doing dozer work I had him cut a ford
from one side of the creek to the other so that we would not have to go
out to the road and drive around to the other side of pasture to check
on the cows. Of course the cows go back and forth and erosion set in
and now it is a nice Jeep trap.
The wrangler was doing something like this when I missed the line,
slipped a deep rut and planted the frame.
http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/MOV00010.MPG
If someone has 40 meg of spare web-space I can put up the rest of the
set of movies. One day we went back there with the Wrangler and the
Liberty and played 'follow the leader' while filming the whole thing.
My ISP only gives me 10 meg of webspace and I was only able to get one
of the files up.
Guest
Posts: n/a
mabar wrote:
> Where was that photo taken?
Out behind my Mom's house. See:
http://lnc.grwelch.com
There is a creek that cuts a 40 acre pasture into two parts. The last
time we had someone out there doing dozer work I had him cut a ford
from one side of the creek to the other so that we would not have to go
out to the road and drive around to the other side of pasture to check
on the cows. Of course the cows go back and forth and erosion set in
and now it is a nice Jeep trap.
The wrangler was doing something like this when I missed the line,
slipped a deep rut and planted the frame.
http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/MOV00010.MPG
If someone has 40 meg of spare web-space I can put up the rest of the
set of movies. One day we went back there with the Wrangler and the
Liberty and played 'follow the leader' while filming the whole thing.
My ISP only gives me 10 meg of webspace and I was only able to get one
of the files up.
> Where was that photo taken?
Out behind my Mom's house. See:
http://lnc.grwelch.com
There is a creek that cuts a 40 acre pasture into two parts. The last
time we had someone out there doing dozer work I had him cut a ford
from one side of the creek to the other so that we would not have to go
out to the road and drive around to the other side of pasture to check
on the cows. Of course the cows go back and forth and erosion set in
and now it is a nice Jeep trap.
The wrangler was doing something like this when I missed the line,
slipped a deep rut and planted the frame.
http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/MOV00010.MPG
If someone has 40 meg of spare web-space I can put up the rest of the
set of movies. One day we went back there with the Wrangler and the
Liberty and played 'follow the leader' while filming the whole thing.
My ISP only gives me 10 meg of webspace and I was only able to get one
of the files up.
Guest
Posts: n/a
mabar wrote:
> Where was that photo taken?
Out behind my Mom's house. See:
http://lnc.grwelch.com
There is a creek that cuts a 40 acre pasture into two parts. The last
time we had someone out there doing dozer work I had him cut a ford
from one side of the creek to the other so that we would not have to go
out to the road and drive around to the other side of pasture to check
on the cows. Of course the cows go back and forth and erosion set in
and now it is a nice Jeep trap.
The wrangler was doing something like this when I missed the line,
slipped a deep rut and planted the frame.
http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/MOV00010.MPG
If someone has 40 meg of spare web-space I can put up the rest of the
set of movies. One day we went back there with the Wrangler and the
Liberty and played 'follow the leader' while filming the whole thing.
My ISP only gives me 10 meg of webspace and I was only able to get one
of the files up.
> Where was that photo taken?
Out behind my Mom's house. See:
http://lnc.grwelch.com
There is a creek that cuts a 40 acre pasture into two parts. The last
time we had someone out there doing dozer work I had him cut a ford
from one side of the creek to the other so that we would not have to go
out to the road and drive around to the other side of pasture to check
on the cows. Of course the cows go back and forth and erosion set in
and now it is a nice Jeep trap.
The wrangler was doing something like this when I missed the line,
slipped a deep rut and planted the frame.
http://www.hal-pc.org/~jcwelch/MOV00010.MPG
If someone has 40 meg of spare web-space I can put up the rest of the
set of movies. One day we went back there with the Wrangler and the
Liberty and played 'follow the leader' while filming the whole thing.
My ISP only gives me 10 meg of webspace and I was only able to get one
of the files up.


